Cath Staincliffe - Split Second

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Split Second: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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On a winter's evening, a trio of unruly teenagers board a bus, ganging up on Luke Murray, hurling abuse and threatening to kill him. The bus is full but no one intervenes until Jason Barnes, a young student, challenges the gang. Luke seizes the chance to run off the bus, but he's followed. Andrew Barnes is dragged from the shower by his wife Valerie: there's a fight in the front garden and Jason's trying to break it up. As Andrew rushes to help, the gang flees. Jason shouts for an ambulance for Luke, but it is he who will pay the ultimate price. Split Second, Cath Staincliffe's insightful and moving novel, explores the impact of violent crime – is it ever right to look the other way?

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She would miss him. He was a good man.

‘On the count of attempted murder, have you reached a verdict upon which you are all agreed?’ asked the clerk.

‘Yes,’ the foreman said.

‘Do you find the defendant Nicola Healy guilty or not guilty?’

Nicola, who had kicked him in the belly, the soft part. Surely if Garrington was guilty on both counts, then the jury must have accepted that he and Nicola had lied, had conspired to blame Conrad Quinn for everything. Yet they had cleared the girl of murder. Louise wondered if they had argued, the jury. If any of them had believed Nicola Healy; if they had debated which of the boys was telling the truth.

Louise’s breath caught, her head spun. The silence arched across the space; she was suspended, rigid, petrified.

‘Guilty.’

Louise felt relief tumbling through her, something loosen inside, and she was weeping, for her boy, for Jason, for herself. For the inhumanity of it all.

‘No!’ Nicola screamed. ‘I never, I never. It’s not fair.’ The guard made her sit down; she was weeping noisily.

Louise felt a swell of gratitude for Mr Sweeney, the man who had fought for her son’s right to justice, who had made them see that he was just an ordinary boy who should have been able to walk the streets without fear. A beloved boy who was cherished and missed.

While the judge spoke, Louise stroked Ruby’s back and closed her eyes. She longed for rest and sleep and some semblance of control again. A life not strained to breaking point as hers had been since last December. She felt close to collapsing. The blood scraping through her veins too fast, the surface of her skin, her scalp tender, sensitive, as if she’d been sunburnt or scalded. She was so very tired.

Andrew

After handshakes and good wishes from Mr Sweeney and his team, and the relief of a hot drink, they had to perform for the public.

Mr Sweeney had a prepared statement to read out, and Andrew would speak next. Louise declined; she didn’t trust them, the press. Not surprising.

‘I’d like to say something.’ Ruby spoke up.

Louise looked startled. Ruby handed a piece of paper to her mother. ‘I wrote it last night.’

Louise scanned it, blinked rapidly, nodded, mute. She passed it to Mr Sweeney. He read it, smiled at Ruby. ‘That’s excellent,’ he said.

It was sunny outside, a golden autumn afternoon. A warm breeze sent dust motes dancing in the air. But Andrew felt cold to the bone, shivery, edgy in spite of the guilty verdict.

He closed his eyes, saw the warm red of his eyelids. The setting sun flooding Jason’s room flaming red. ‘And that’s the west, the sun always sets there. And the other way is east, where it rises.’

‘How does it get there?’

‘I’ll show you.’

Felt loss tumble through him again. Oh my boy, my love.

There was an atmosphere of victory, of triumph. News crews were asking for comments. Mr Sweeney stood between Val and Andrew, Louise and Ruby as he spoke. Andrew’s parents and Colin and Izzie waited behind them with others from the legal team and the police.

‘I would like to thank the jury, the witnesses and the families for their dedication and service in an extremely distressing case. The verdict today is all we hoped for and justice has been done. Thank you. Now Mr Barnes would like to address you.’

Andrew shivered, cleared his throat. ‘Jason was our wonderful child. A young man with everything ahead of him. And we will never come to terms with losing him.’ He faltered, focused on Jason giggling; Jason strumming his guitar; Jason scuffing his feet on the ground, his laces trailing; Jason bent over a map, drawing shark fins in the sea. ‘Nothing can bring Jason back,’ Andrew said, ‘but the people who took him from us have been caught and convicted. For that we are grateful. He will live forever in our hearts.’

Mr Sweeney introduced Ruby, and there was another battery of flashes as the photographers set to work. Ruby raised her piece of paper and read: ‘I miss my brother Luke every day. Sometimes you don’t know how important a person is until they are gone. Luke is still in a coma; he will probably never wake up. I’m glad the people who did it will be punished, but I wish it had never happened. I wish he was still here, and all right. I love him so much – and my mum. And I want to say thank you to Jason, who tried to protect Luke, and I’m sorry that he lost his life trying to help.’

Val had her eyes cast down, hiding from the sentiments, Andrew guessed. He sniffed hard and focused on the trees that edged the square, the leaves beginning to turn. Mr Sweeney thanked the press, shook hands with the families again, and the group began to split up.

‘What would you say to other people, Mr Barnes?’ one of the reporters shouted. ‘Should they have a go or walk away?’ The question hung in the air, echoing round the square as Andrew and Val, their family and Louise and Ruby walked down the steps and through the crowd.

Emma

Emma rang her mum that evening. ‘Did you see the news?’ she asked her.

‘Of course,’ her mum said. ‘They got what they deserved. A case like that, you wish they’d bring back the death penalty.’

Emma gritted her teeth, closed her eyes. As if more killing would make anything better.

‘What train are you getting on Friday?’ her mum said.

Emma’s mouth went dry. ‘I’m not coming.’

‘Why? What’s happened?’

‘It’s Dad. I’m sick of him making nasty comments.’ Emma got to her feet, walked to the window. There was a train pulling in. She turned back into the room.

‘Oh Emma, it’s just his way,’ her mum wheedled.

‘Listen to me,’ she said, ‘please. I’m not going to put up with it any more.’ Her skin felt peculiar, like it was covered in a prickly mesh. Her heart was running fast.

‘It’s only-’

‘Let me talk!’ she shouted. There was a shocked silence at the other end of the phone. ‘I don’t want to see him again. Ever. I don’t want to hear from him or about him.’ Her voice shook, but she kept going. ‘I’d love to see you, Mum, but I’m not coming to the house. Not when he’s there.’

‘That’s ridiculous, Emma,’ her mother snapped.

‘We can meet in town sometime, or you can come here, but I mean it, Mum.’ Emma quelled the fear and the tears that brimmed just below the surface. She had hoped stupidly that her mum might understand, might even have some sympathy.

‘You’re upset,’ her mum cajoled.

‘Yes, and he’s the reason why. I don’t want him in my life.’ She was trembling, her breath hard to catch. She imagined him ranting at her, dragging her home and making her feel sick and stupid.

‘He’s your father, Emma.’

‘I mean it, Mum. I’m going now.’

‘Well what shall I tell him?’ Her mother’s voice rose, shrill with exasperation.

‘Whatever you like,’ Emma said. ‘Bye.’ She set down her phone, then ran around the room making mewling noises, half petrified and half elated. Waving her hands at her sides.

After she’d calmed down a bit, she fed the fish and had a Thai green curry ready-meal. And a bowl of rice pudding. Then she texted Laura and Simon: Anything on @ weekend? Letz party.

And she sang in the shower.

Andrew

Andrew slept well that night. When he woke, Val’s side of the bed was empty. There was a calm within him, reminding him of the sensation after a long hill walk, or an arduous journey: the feeling of achievement, the respite of reaching the final destination. An ordeal completed and the body and mind able to let go.

He showered and dressed. Downstairs he made coffee and toast and took it into the conservatory. He wondered where Val was. Perhaps she’d gone shopping; perhaps the conclusion of the trial, the landmark of the verdict, had released her from the worst of her depression and she had made a new start. Maybe she was out there, busy, practical. The old Val was coming back.

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